Honolulu, Hawaii, USA
University of Hawai’i at Mānoa and Sig Zane Designs designed a wayfinding system that displays a blend of the Hawaiian and English languages in physical and digital formats and invites campus visitors to actively interact with Hawaiian navigation tools and geospatial body alignment practices.
Beyond Wayfinding has been awarded a 2023 Good Design Award by The Chicago Athenaeum: Museum of Architecture and Design and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies.
The design team behind the project understands that representing indigenous voices in Hawai‘i and around the world has never been more important. Their knowledge systems are inherently tuned to local contexts and have to a great extent, been erased from daily life.
As universities across the country and around the world confront their pasts, the source of their lands, and the actors that built their institutions, they must enter into dialogues with the very communities that they have historically marginalized through their actions.
That is why the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa initiated this project with the understanding that the physical campus, which was primarily built before the Hawaiian cultural renaissance, needs to transform itself to better represent Native Hawaiians and take an active role in regenerating and normalizing Hawaiian language and culture.
From the outset, the project was envisioned as a deeply integral part of campus infrastructure.
The Beyond Wayfinding project has sparked cross-departmental conversations and resulted in the generous contributions of more than 100 faculty, researchers, and students.
Led by two principal investigators, one an architecture professor and the other a user researcher and design strategist, the team was composed of undergraduate and graduate research assistants from graphic design, architecture, UI/UX, and business, the majority of which were raised in Hawai‘i and included several that identify as Native Hawaiian.
Supported by the UH Native Hawaiian Program Office, the inter-professional team conducted generative design workshops and constructed prototypes and full-scale mock-ups on the campus to gather contextually-informed feedback.
Final design concepts formed the basis of an RFP that required the inclusion of a Native Hawaiian design team to build upon and further the design system.
Project: Beyond Wayfinding
Designers: University of Hawai’i at Mānoa, Sig Zane Kaiao and Sig Zane Designs
Design team: Brian Strawn, Karla Sierralta (University of Hawai’i at Mānoa) & Nalani Kanaka‘ole, Sig Zane, and Kūha’o Zane (Sig Zane Kaiao and Sig Zane Designs)
Client: University of Hawai’i at Mānoa, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA